Sunday, June 2, 2013

Guatemalan mine dispute militarizes region

FILE - In this May 2, 2013 file photo, soldiers check passengers for weapons at a checkpoint in Mataquescuintla, Guatemala. The government declared a state of siege and banned public gatherings in four townships, including Mataquescuintla, following violent clashes between police and residents protesting a foreign-run mining project. Protesters fear the project, El Escobal, in San Rafael will drain or pollute the local water supply, and they?ve blocked roads and burned buildings to stop it from going forward. A common complaint is that locals feel they were not consulted about the project before its approval. (AP Photo/Luis Soto)

FILE - In this May 2, 2013 file photo, soldiers check passengers for weapons at a checkpoint in Mataquescuintla, Guatemala. The government declared a state of siege and banned public gatherings in four townships, including Mataquescuintla, following violent clashes between police and residents protesting a foreign-run mining project. Protesters fear the project, El Escobal, in San Rafael will drain or pollute the local water supply, and they?ve blocked roads and burned buildings to stop it from going forward. A common complaint is that locals feel they were not consulted about the project before its approval. (AP Photo/Luis Soto)

In this May 2, 2013 photo, residents walk past a cordon of soldiers standing guard at a checkpoint in San Rafael Las Flores, Guatemala. The soldiers and the fear bring back memories of the country?s three-decade-long civil war. What?s brought the troops this time is a dispute over plans by Vancouver-based Tahoe Resources Inc. to tap what the company says is one of the five largest silver deposits in the world. Protesters fear the project, El Escobal, in San Rafael will drain or pollute the local water supply, and they?ve blocked roads and burned buildings to stop it from going forward. (AP Photo/Luis Soto)

In this May 2, 2013 photo, a soldier inspects a bus at a checkpoint in Mataquescuintla, Guatemala. The soldiers and the fear bring back memories of the country?s three-decade-long civil war. What?s brought the troops this time is a dispute over plans by Vancouver-based Tahoe Resources Inc. to tap what the company says is one of the five largest silver deposits in the world. The crackdowns have led to charges that the government of Otto Perez Molina favors foreign investors over communities, with the controversy threatening popular support for his government. (AP Photo/Luis Soto)

(AP) ? The neighbors of the San Rafael silver mine no longer come out of their homes for fear of the machine-gun toting troops and police who man checkpoints in these green, wooded mountains. The plaza in the town of San Rafael Las Flores, where the community used to mingle, is now deserted.

The fear that rules this terrain, where residents are mostly Xinca Indians, recall the bad old days of the country's three-decade-long civil war, which killed as many as 200,000 people. But what's brought in the troops this time are protests over plans by Vancouver-based Tahoe Resources Inc. to tap what the company says is one of the five largest silver deposits in the world.

Protesters say the project, called El Escobal, will drain or pollute the local water supply, and hundreds of people have blocked roads and burned buildings to stop it from going forward. That's tested President Otto Perez Molina, who sent in hundreds of troops and suspended the right to hold public gatherings in four townships near the mine in early May. It was the second time during his 16 months in office that he has declared a state of siege in response to protests against a foreign-run mining project.

With violence rising, the mine protests have now emerged not only as a threat to Perez Molina's young administration but also a warning to other foreign companies seeking to invest in the region. The residents of San Rafael, however, say they're been left with no choice but to fight and accuse the government of favoring foreign investors over communities.

"This is affecting us, we feel intimidated," said 18-year-old Miriam Munoz, whose nervous parents didn't want her to go to school because of all the soldiers and police outside. "The situation isn't going to change until the president comes to deal with it."

The company and its supporters deny the town's accusations, saying the mine will instead bring jobs and tens of millions of dollars to local governments and communities.

Andres Davila, the mine's coordinator of corporate communications, said the metal will be extracted through a flotation process in which the ore is passed through water. The process involves the chemical reagent zinc cyanide, which Davila said "is not discharged into rivers because it is reused at the same site."

"Half of the (mine's) employees are from San Rafael and 95 percent are Guatemalans," Davila said. "For every dollar, 35 cents will stay in Guatemala for taxes, royalties and voluntary contributions."

Claudia Samayoa, director of Guatemala's Human Rights Defense Unit, said the political damage has already been done.

"One interesting thing we have been finding in San Rafael Las Flores and the communities affected by the state of siege is that people who supported the president are telling us they no longer back him," said.

Indeed, a new poll by CID Gallup shows approval of Perez Molina's presidency falling 20 percentage points over the past year, from 68 percent in May 2012 to 48 percent this May. The poll, which was conducted between May 2-9 and had a margin for error of 3 percentage points, cites street violence and a lack of jobs for the fall.

Such conflicts are breaking out all over Latin America, where local resistance to foreign-driven mining projects have paralyzed whole regions and claimed dozens of casualties. At the same time, such projects have become ever more popular as world prices for copper, iron ore and other metals have boomed, driven in large part by growing demand from China.

In Peru, such protests have presented a major challenge to President Ollanta Humala, while similar outrage over foreign exploitation of local resources helped defeat presidents in Bolivia.

Activists say problems at the Guatemala mine began in 2007, when the owner at the time, Canada's Goldcorp Inc., came to San Rafael with an exploration license. In 2010, the mine was sold to Tahoe Resources.

"Since then the problems have aggravated," said Oscar Morales, president of the Community Development Council, which serves as a link between locals and political authorities. He spoke with the AP from a secret location where he has been in hiding since authorities raided his and family members' homes searching for arms. He said nothing turned up in the searches.

Morales said eight community consultations of 4,222 adults found that nearly all of them opposed the mine. He said he wants to hold another legally binding community consultation about the mine, but municipal governments have refused.

The violence has only grown more destructive the longer the dispute remains unresolved.

On Sept. 17, 2012, mine workers transporting tubes for electrical cables on the main highway were stopped and held by local residents opposed to the mine. The following day, unknown attackers set fire to mine warehouses and a patrol car. About two months later, enraged residents burned a hotel and stole dynamite belonging to the mine when authorities blocked a community meeting about the mine in the nearby town of Mataquescuintla.

The deadliest clash occurred on Jan. 11, when a shootout between protesters and mine security guards left one farmer and two guards dead. Then, on March 17, unidentified gunmen abducted four members of the Xinca parliament in confusing circumstances. One ended up dead.

Faced with the growing violence, the national government announced the creation of a mediation commission, and on April 3, the government granted a 25-year exploitation license to the San Rafael mine "after it fulfilled all the requisites set by law," according to Davila. The mine has the necessary permits but is not yet operating.

After another protest left a policeman dead and six locals wounded, Perez Molina declared a 30-day state of siege that banned public gatherings and other civil liberties in four townships around the mine in Jalapa and Santa Rosa states. Some 500 police officers and 2,000 soldiers were sent to the area. The president later lowered the alert to a state of prevention, saying troops could no longer detain or arrest people without justification.

"It is not only because of problems at the mine, but also because of organized crime" that the emergency was decreed, said Perez Molina, but human rights organizations called the move a "criminalization of the legitimate demands of the population opposed to the mine."

Tahoe Resources vigorously defends the San Rafael project, which it expects to start operating before the end of the year. It says it has reached out to 2,000 locals to explain the benefits the mine brings.

And some locals laud the jobs it offers.

"My father and my brother work in the mine. I have received a scholarship from the mine. I think it is bringing development to San Rafael," said 17-year-old student Paola.

Many protesters and farmers, however, are skeptical. They say the mine has already transformed the region, if only with all the troops and checkpoints that remain throughout the region.

"What matters least is the money," said Vicente Morales, who lives 1.2 miles (2 kilometers) from the mine. "What we don't want is that in a few years our lands no longer produce, that the environment is damaged, that the river is polluted."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-06-01-Guatemala-Mining%20Dispute/id-f0817ebe17da449883b7f17dacc0fce1

Breaking Amish Indianapolis explosion mike brown bcs rankings jay cutler applebees jeff gordon

China and the US Are Going to Sit Down and Talk About All This Hacking

China and the US Are Going to Sit Down and Talk About All This Hacking

China's been hacking up a storm recently, up to and including stealing sensitive, confidential weapon designs from the US. Things started coming to something of a head early last month, when the Pentagon finally directly accused China of being the perpetrator of all this cyber-tretchery. Now, according to the New York Times, a nice little hacking-chat has been scheduled between the two powers.

From The Times:

The talks will begin in July. Next Friday, President Obama and President Xi Jinping of China, who took office this spring, are scheduled to hold an unusual, informal summit meeting in Rancho Mirage, Calif., that could set the tone for their relationship and help them confront chronic tensions like the nuclear threat from North Korea.

American officials say they do not expect the process to immediately yield a significant reduction in the daily intrusions from China. ...Nonetheless, a senior American official involved in the negotiations to hold regular meetings said in an interview on Friday that ?we need to get some norms and rules.?

It's only the first very small step in dealing with a pretty enormous problem, but it's far more palatable than something like, say, war. And even if everything is civil, it's not exactly easy to agree to the regulation of nebulous cyberweapons. But if we can agree to not completely demolish each other's digital infrastructure, that'd be a pretty good start. [The New York Times]

Image by scyther5/Shutterstock

Source: http://gizmodo.com/china-and-the-us-are-going-to-sit-down-and-talk-about-a-510869117

Pacific Rim Ravi Shankar Geminid meteor shower right to work Clackamas Town Center 12 12 12 Anne Hathaway Wardrobe Malfunction

Jailed Pussy Riot member ends hunger strike

MOSCOW (AP) ? A jailed member of the punk group Pussy Riot has ended her 11-day hunger strike Saturday after prison authorities met her demands, an activist said.

Maria Alekhina had complained that officials at her prison colony in the Ural Mountains attempted to turn fellow inmates against her with a security crackdown. Inmates, who could previously enter and leave their workplace freely, had to wait for up to an hour for prison guards to escort them.

Pyotr Verzilov, the husband of Alekhina's jailed band mate Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, told The Associated Press that Alekhina called Saturday to say she has ended her action after prison officials restored the normal security regime.

Verzilov said authorities took Alekhina, who was hospitalized Tuesday, on a tour across the prison colony, so that she sees that all extra security measures were removed. The extra security meant that inmates were denied prompt medical care when they sustained injuries during their work sewing uniforms.

"It looks improbable, it's not in the tradition of the prison system here to make any concessions," Verzilov said. "There must have been a political decision."

Alekhina's lawyer, Irina Khrunova, confirmed to the AP that she ended the hunger strike, but gave no further details.

Alekhina and Tolokonnikova are serving two-year sentences over an irreverent punk protest against Vladimir Putin in Moscow's main cathedral. The third band member convicted alongside them, Yekaterina Samutsevich, was later released on appeal.

Courts have denied parole to Alekhina and Tolokonnikova, who are serving their sentence in different prison colonies.

Alekhina earlier spent five months in solitary confinement after claiming that officials deliberately lodged her with hardened criminals, including a convicted murderer, and encouraged them to intimidate her.

In a complaint filed in January, Khrunova wrote that officials did nothing after seeing criminals threaten Alekhina with violence. The lawyer said officials also wrote false psychiatric reports and pushed Alekhina into violating colony rules.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jailed-pussy-riot-member-ends-hunger-strike-132808247.html

KDKA Pumpkin Carving Ideas Hurricane Sandy path sandy Time Change 2012 news 12 world series

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Secret to Self-Care without being Selfish | The Ladipo Group ...

I used to go straight from work to pick up my children at school. They would rush to hug me with dirty hands, there would be the loud chatter of a school, and they would immediately launch into telling me about their day. I was on sensory overload and all I wanted to do was go home, get something to eat, and have some peace and quiet. So I rushed them out of school to rush to the car to rush home. Meanwhile I was only half listening to them talk because I would rather listen to music or the thoughts in my head. It has been a long day and I deserve some quiet time I thought to myself.

This is where the seed of selfishness begins to develop. I focused on my needs and desires without considering those of my children. It is the focus on myself without consideration for others that is at the heart of selfishness. My children knew that I wasn?t listening so they spoke louder and over each other until I yelled at them to stop interrupting and talk quieter. Then the tears came and everyone felt angry and sad. And I felt resentment and guilt.

Put on your own oxygen mask first.

When you travel on an airplane they explain that ?Should the cabin lose pressure oxygen masks will drop down. Place the mask over your own nose and mouth before assisting others.? If you do not give yourself oxygen you will pass out and be unable to assist others. Or in my case, if I do not give myself a break I will be resentful and angry and hurt people I love.

My oxygen mask means stopping at home before I pick up my kids from school. Sometimes I leave work early and other times I pick them up later to make this possible. I change my clothes, get a snack, and enjoy the quiet of the house. I am then more present and focused on my children when I?m with them. I am physically more comfortable, don?t worry about my clothes, and I am fed. Taking those 10 minutes actually helps me to be less selfish and I am not resentful or angry or guilty. Instead I am as I want to be, excited to see my children and hear about their day.

Do you put your own oxygen mask on first? If you don?t, how would your relationships be different if you did? How would you feel if you breathed fresh air before tending to your other relationships? Let?s discuss!

Source: http://www.theladipogroup.com/2013/05/31/oxygen-masks-needed-care-reduce-resentment/

justin tv justin tv Sarah Savage Jaimie Alexander Army Navy Game john lennon leann rimes

Gold Investing Strategies | Gold Trading

Gold investing, believe it or not, is still considered a standard for monetary exchange in many countries to this day. Gold is probably one of the most liquid investments and is traded in the stock market" 24 hours a day everywhere in the world. In other words, this means that you can buy and sell gold in just about every country. There are different formats you can choose from gold investing, such as gold bars or coins, gold accounts, gold mining shares, gold stock, gold futures, and gold certificates.

Gold investing, as compared to other market sectors, can be quite complex and intimidating for investors who have not yet researched it in depth. Gold investing stands out as a diversifier and with your stocks, bonds and cash, gold can help offset variations in the market. There are a lot of financial consultants that recommend having at least 5% of gold in their stock portfolio. Some gold investors believe that a reasonable distribution of gold in a moderate, diversified portfolio is 5% to 15% during a bull market in gold and is 1 to 3% during a bear market in gold. This allocation will provide stable insurance for your stock portfolio, portfolio diversification, and excellent long-term return on investment. With gold up in price 23% in 2006, gold investing offsets weakness in other investments.Gold is in a bull market because its core investment fundamentals are so outstanding. The gold price, like every other commodity or stock, is ultimately driven by supply and demand. When gold investing, coins are a popular way to invest as they are easy to buy and sell. Gold bullion coins are priced according to their weight. The most popular bullion gold coins are the South African Krugerrand, the Canadian Gold Maple Leaf, the American Gold Eagle and American Gold Buffalo.

Traditionally, gold investing has provided the best protection against financial disaster and turmoil. In circumstances such as currency deflation or high inflation, gold investing offers you both safety and security. The extent of the upside potential for gold is a function of the amount of paper assets that would be sold off and converted to gold, in the event of a financial catastrophe. If you have only paper in your stock portfolio, know that gold tends to move in the opposite direction of paper investments when stock trading.

Gold investing in gold mining shares is when you invest in the mining companies searching for the gold and not in the gold directly. The appreciation potential of a gold share is depending upon the future price of gold. When gold investing, it is important to note that many mining firms sell their future production years in advance. This means that with gold mutual fund investing your risk is more varied. Some funds offer a broad mix of international mining stock.

Frequently Asked Questions

  1. QUESTION:
    What is a good investment when the market is up?
    Hi,

    I've started learning about investing over the last couple of weeks. Right now, since the market has been going up very fast over the last few weeks, I'm waiting for it to go down again to invest in some index funds. That is, I'm trying to use a value based investing strategy.

    But meanwhile, is there something good to invest in when the market is up like this? Something that would go up when the market eventually goes down some?

    Thanks!

  2. QUESTION:
    What are the most important rules/advices for investing in gold?
    I have a girl who's almost a year old. During the next years I would buy her gold from time to time. But I want to know what would be the best way? Whent to buy? Sell? And how to manage gold investment?

    • ANSWER:
      Visit this site

      http://free-gold-investing-info.blogspot.com/

      To get free tips from Wall Street Professionals and receive reports, charts and strategies on investing in gold.

  3. QUESTION:
    How does investing in gold work and is it worth it?
    I want to start making my money work for me. Is gold the best option?

    • ANSWER:
      There are several ways to invest in gold.

      Buy gold coins. Disadvantages: have to store them, have to pay mark up to buy and mark down to sell. Subject to theft.

      Buy GLD. ETF that tracks the price of gold. Disadvantages: Has annual expenses.

      Buy gold mine stocks. Disadvantages: subject to management mismanagement. Try this site

      http://free-gold-investing-info.blogspot.com/

      To get free tips from Wall Street Professionals and receive reports, charts and strategies on investing in gold.

  4. QUESTION:
    What do you think about the Gold prices? Is it likely to increase or decrease with in the coming months?
    Planning to invest in to it, is it a fair idea?

    Could you plz help me out with this, keeping in mind the current Market Scenario relating to the Indian & US Market ??
    Thanks you for the Answers Guys.

    I have also heard it would go as low as 18 k in few months (Though it seems unbelieveable but can it really happen )

    • ANSWER:
      Gold is a great investment, but only if you do it right. The usual procedure is to have 5% of your portfolio in gold and just hold on to it forever. This is known as "buy and hold forever" or "little old lady strategy." The gold is supposed to be there for emergencies only, when all other assets decline to nearly worthless.

      When the economy is doing well, the purchasing power of gold tends to decline at an annual rate of about 1% (plus a lot of random bouncing around). In times of financial crisis it goes back up to where it was (adjusted for inflation). To put it another way, gold ownership is a form of insurance. It's like having homeowner's insurance: if your house never burns down, the insurance premiums are just money down the drain, but still money well spent.

      If you are asking what gold will be doing in the coming months, you are speculating, not investing. That kind of speculating is best left to hedge-fund managers who have sufficient expertise and diversification.

      UPDATE

      Even companies that own gold mines don't try to predict the price of gold. Instead they sell gold futures 18 months out. They sell just enough contracts so that no matter what happens to the price of gold they come out even. Gold refiners and jewelers do the same thing, buying futures contracts as a hedge against price fluctuations.

  5. QUESTION:
    What can you tell me about UTMA and investing in gold, silver, aluminum, and oil?
    I understand the UTMA regulations prohibit minors from directly owning equities. Do these same restrictions apply to gold, silver, oil, aluminum, steel, etc.? If not, what would you suggest to invest in, and is this strategy better than investing in such other means as mutual funds, bonds, or money market accounts? Thanks!

    • ANSWER:
      I'm not sure I understand your statement "UTMA regulations prohibit minors from directly owning equities". A UTMA account CAN own stocks. I suppose that technically the minor doesn't own the stock since it's the account's "trustee" (normally a parent or guardian) that has legal responsibility for the account, but the account is for the benefit of the minor and can legally only be used for things that benefit the minor (e.g. college tuition, summer camp, etc.) so for all practical purposes it's the same thing.

      I don't know of any rules that prohibit ownership of things like gold and silver, though I suppose it's possible. I've never read the UTMA rules word for word and have never invested in commodities in my kids' UTMA accounts.

      I personally would question the wisdom of buying into things like that now anyway. Nearly all commodities have risen dramatically in price over the last year or two. While a certain amount of that is basic supply/demand, I think a lot of it is speculation (i.e. people looking to make a quick buck buying into the latest fad investment). We've seen what happened with tech stocks about 7 years ago and real estate over the past couple years. I think there's a good chance that the same thing (a price collapse) could happen in the commodities that have run so far up in price. As soon as there's a period of declines, I suspect that many of the speculators will bail out driving prices down even more. I personally think commodities are a high risk investment at this point.

      As for what the best thing to invest in, that will vary depending on how soon the money is needed, risk tolerance, etc. Over long periods of time, however, stocks have historically provided the highest returns of any asset class, so that's my preferred investment for long-term gains.

Source: http://tradinggold.net/?p=34710

Survivor Philippines Fashion Island shooting Victor Cruz nfl standings Vicki Soto Adam Lanza cnbc

Video: Ripken on fixing game

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/21134540/vp/52052407#52052407

google stock china gdp dont trust the b in apartment 23 johnny damon kirk cameron news 10 hillary rosen

Mermaids: New Evidence Nets Record Ratings, Raises Viewer Questions

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/mermaids-new-evidence-nets-record-ratings-raises-viewer-question/

niki minaj grammy performance grammys 2012 deadmau5 phoebe snow jennifer hudson tribute to whitney houston nicki minaj grammy jason whitlock